Dr Claude Belgon (Helmut Bakaitis) watches from the shadows as Jasper Morello (Joel Edgerton) is attacked by the creature they discover on the island. Summary by Dr Marian Quigley.
The mythical nature of the film is highlighted by Jasper’s comparison of the creature’s call to the 'fabled sirens’ whose songs drew sailors to their deaths. Claude’s lack of concern for humanity is highlighted by the dispassionate way he watches as the creature is transformed into a monster whose tentacles ensnare Jasper. Blood, a recurring motif in the film, is depicted here by the redness of the monster’s inner organs and provides one of the film’s rare usages of sharp colour contrasts, thereby heightening its drama. The clip also demonstrates Anthony Lucas’s method of combining real 3D objects such as sticks and leaves with 2D paper cut outs and drawings which are then digitally manipulated.
In this animated film, the aerial navigator Jasper Morello (voiced by Joel Edgerton), accompanied by the academy biologist Dr Claude Belgon (voiced by Helmut Bakaitis), sets out on a voyage aboard the airship Resolution to establish a line of beacons enabling wireless communication. Claude is searching for a cure for the fatal epidemic sweeping Gothia whilst Jasper – whose navigational error on his previous voyage caused a crew member’s death – hopes to redeem his career.
Following a collision with the airship Hieronymous, and the discovery of the skeletons of its crew, Claude convinces Captain Griswald (voiced by Tommy Dysart) to continue their journey aboard the abandoned vessel. On an island, they discover a dangerous creature which embodies a cure for the plague. They take on board live specimens of the creature. On their return journey, Jasper faces a moral dilemma when he realises that Claude is prepared to sacrifice human lives in order to achieve personal fame.
An Oscar nominee for Best Short Animation as well as winner of the Grand Prix at the Annecy International Animated Film Festival and two AFI Awards in 2005, The Mysterious Geographic Explorations of Jasper Morello is a visually stunning film. Director Anthony Lucas established this unique animation style, where silhouette paper cut-outs of hand-drawn characters are scanned then digitally manipulated, making his student film Shadowland (1988) then used it again in Holding Your Breath (2001). Although the style has been compared with Lotte Reininger’s The Adventures of Prince Achmed (1926), Lucas explains that he stumbled on the technique by accident when a light on an animation table went out.
Skilfully combining 2D and 3D animation techniques, the film conveys an imaginary world containing both Victorian and futuristic elements whilst its compelling story recalls the nineteenth century adventure tales of Jules Verne and Edgar Allen Poe. As well as the classic gothic elements of death, decay and terror, the film reflects the 'steampunk’ genre, seen in Katsuhiro Ôtomo’s Japanese anime Steamboy (2004), which nostalgically envisions an early Victorian era of steam-powered machines. Despite their apparent bulk, steam-powered airships float through the polluted industrial atmosphere of Gothia whilst intricate, cog-driven machinery and Jasper’s compass in particular, assume an almost magical quality. Ultimately, however, Jasper must rely on himself rather than technology in order to resolve his moral dilemma.
The story, narrated by Jasper, is based on a traditional hero’s journey narrative in which the hero (Jasper) leaves the ordinary world (Gothia) to travel on a quest to a special world (the volcanic island), then returns to the ordinary world. The film, which evokes an aura of mystery from the outset, is a superb example of the way in which animation, at its best, can create a magical imaginary, yet convincing, world.
The Jasper Morello website lists the film as 'the first voyage’ in a trilogy based on the adventures of the aerial navigator. The Mysterious Geographic Explorations of Jasper Morello was produced by Anthony Lucas’s company, 3-D Films, with production funding from Film Victoria and finance from the Australian Film Commission and SBS Independent.
Jasper Morello was selected for over 40 film festivals and competitions internationally. It played in cinemas around Australia from December 2005, in a double bill with the silent Soviet Union documentary The Man with a Movie Camera (1929, with a new score by Michael Nyman). SBS broadcast Jasper Morello on 10 March 2006 and it was released on DVD on 15 March 2006.
Notes by Dr Marian Quigley
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.